John Hay, 12th Earl of Erroll

John Hay, 12th Earl of Erroll (died 30 December 1704) was a Scottish nobleman and Lord High Constable of Scotland. Among his titles was Lord of Slains, but he had previously been known as John Hay of Kellour.

Marriage and issue

Hay was a son of Sir Andrew Hay of Killour and his wife Margaret, who was the first Lord Kinnaird's sister.[1] Kinnaird was a royalist, supporting the claims of Charles II.[2] He had a younger sister, Jean.[3]

He became the 12th Earl of Erroll and 16th Lord High Constable of Scotland in 1674 after the 11th Earl, Gilbert Hay, died without issue. Prior to this inheritance he had been known as John Hay of Kellour.[4]

Hay's wife was Lady Anne Drummond (b. January 1656) and their marriage contract was dated 1 October 1674. She was the daughter of James Drummond, the 3rd Earl of Perth[4] and sister of the Jacobite Dukes, James Drummond and John Drummond.[5]

The couple had five children: three sons, Charles, James and Thomas; and two daughters, Mary and Margaret.[4]

Life

Hay became a Burgess of Perth and Aberdeen from October 1672 and was the Sheriff principal of Aberdeen from the beginning of May 1685. The Earl supported the House of Stuart and as his brother-in-law, James Drummond, was Lord Chancellor and head of the Scottish government at the time of the 1688 Revolution, the Earl and his wife took great notice of the events. However, the Earl was described as acting with "singular moderation and judgment".[1]

He was also Chancellor of King's College, Aberdeen from February 1700.[4]

Papers of William II give an indication of the extensive lands owned by the Earl of Erroll in October 1700. The ratification includes areas of land at Turriff, Banff, Slains, Pitmedden, Crimond including Crimonmogate and several other places. Slains Castle is recorded as the principal family residence.[6]

Death and legacy

The 12th Earl of Erroll died on 30 December 1704. The estate was formally inherited by his son, Charles, on 24 April 1705. Charles, 13th Earl, took his Parliamentary seat at the end of June 1705 but was a prisoner in Edinburgh Castle from 1708; he died aged 40 years on 16 October 1717. As he was unmarried and without issue, the title fell to his sister, Mary, who became Mary Hay, 14th Countess of Erroll.[7]

gollark: Double prefixes are BANNED.
gollark: See, there's actually no escape.
gollark: ++remind 12124901581725912894fs <@!734140198236979302> bee
gollark: Coincidence then.
gollark: I assume you did it deliberately, it's not hard.

References

Citations

  1. Mackintosh (1898), p. 258
  2. "Kinnaird, George Patrick". Dictionary of National Biography. Retrieved 3 October 2013.
  3. Paul (1904), p. 573
  4. Paul (1904), p. 579
  5. Jerdan (1870)
  6. "Ratification in favour of John Hay, earl of Erroll". Records of the Parliaments of Scotland. Archived from the original on 30 September 2013. Retrieved 30 September 2013.
  7. Paul (1904), pp. 579–580

Bibliography

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